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Information Technology Department
Chapter 4: E-R Model Information Technology Department Bryar Hassan (MSc Eng.)
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Contents Design Process Modeling Constraints E-R Diagram Design Issues
Weak Entity Sets Database Design Database System Concepts
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Modeling A database can be modeled as:
a collection of entities, relationship among entities. An entity is an object that exists and is distinguishable from other objects. Example: specific person, company, event, plant Entities have attributes Example: people have names and addresses An entity set is a set of entities of the same type that share the same properties. Example: set of all persons, companies, trees, holidays Database System Concepts
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Entity Sets instructor and student
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Relationship Sets The SQL data-definition language (DDL) allows the specification of information about relations, including: The schema for each relation. The domain of values associated with each attribute. Integrity constraints And as we will see later, also other information such as The set of indices to be maintained for each relations. Security and authorization information for each relation. The physical storage structure of each relation on disk. A relationship is an association among several entities Example: (Peltier) advisor (Einstein) student entity relationship set instructor entity Database System Concepts
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Relationship Set advisor
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Relationship Sets (Cont.)
An attribute can also be property of a relationship set. For instance, the advisor relationship set between entity sets instructor and student may have the attribute date which tracks when the student started being associated with the advisor Database System Concepts
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Degree of a Relationship Set
Binary Relationship involve two entity sets (or degree two). most relationship sets in a database system are binary. Relationships between more than two entity sets are rare. Most relationships are binary. (More on this later.) Example: students work on research projects under the guidance of an instructor. relationship proj_guide is a ternary relationship between instructor, student, and project Database System Concepts
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Attributes An entity is represented by a set of attributes, that is descriptive properties possessed by all members of an entity set. Example: instructor = (ID, name, street, city, salary ) course= (course_id, title, credits) Domain – the set of permitted values for each attribute Attribute types: atomic and non-atomic attributes. Single-valued and multivalued attributes Example: multivalued attribute: phone_numbers Derived attributes Can be computed from other attributes Example: age, given date_of_birth Database System Concepts
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Composite Attributes Database System Concepts
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Mapping Cardinality Constraints
Express the number of entities to which another entity can be associated via a relationship set. Most useful in describing binary relationship sets. For a binary relationship set the mapping cardinality must be one of the following types: One to one One to many Many to one Many to many Database System Concepts
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Mapping Cardinalities
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Mapping Cardinalities
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Keys A super key of an entity set is a set of one or more attributes whose values uniquely determine each entity. A candidate key of an entity set is a minimal super key ID is candidate key of instructor course_id is candidate key of course Although several candidate keys may exist, one of the candidate keys is selected to be the primary key. Database System Concepts
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Keys for Relationship Sets
The combination of primary keys of the participating entity sets forms a super key of a relationship set. (s_id, i_id) is the super key of advisor NOTE: this means a pair of entity sets can have at most one relationship in a particular relationship set. Example: if we wish to track multiple meeting dates between a student and her advisor, we cannot assume a relationship for each meeting. We can use a multivalued attribute though Must consider the mapping cardinality of the relationship set when deciding what are the candidate keys Need to consider semantics of relationship set in selecting the primary key in case of more than one candidate key Database System Concepts
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Redundant Attributes Suppose we have entity sets
instructor, with attributes including dept_name Department and a relationship inst_dept relating instructor and department Attribute dept_name in entity instructor is redundant since there is an explicit relationship inst_dept which relates instructors to departments The attribute replicates information present in the relationship, and should be removed from instructor BUT: when converting back to tables, in some cases the attribute gets reintroduced, as we will see. Database System Concepts
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E-R Diagrams Rectangles represent entity sets.
Diamonds represent relationship sets. Attributes listed inside entity rectangle Underline indicates primary key attributes Database System Concepts
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Entity With Non-atomic, Multivalued, and Derived Attributes
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Relationship Sets with Attributes
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Roles Entity sets of a relationship need not be distinct
Each occurrence of an entity set plays a “role” in the relationship The labels “course_id” and “prereq_id” are called roles. Database System Concepts
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Cardinality Constraints
We express cardinality constraints by drawing either a directed line (), signifying “one,” or an undirected line (—), signifying “many,” between the relationship set and the entity set. One-to-one relationship: A student is associated with at most one instructor via the relationship advisor A student is associated with at most one department via stud_dept Database System Concepts
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One-to-One Relationship
one-to-one relationship between an instructor and a student an instructor is associated with at most one student via advisor and a student is associated with at most one instructor via advisor Database System Concepts
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One-to-Many Relationship
one-to-many relationship between an instructor and a student an instructor is associated with several (including 0) students via advisor a student is associated with at most one instructor via advisor Database System Concepts
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Many-to-One Relationships
In a many-to-one relationship between an instructor and a student, an instructor is associated with at most one student via advisor, and a student is associated with several (including 0) instructors via advisor Database System Concepts
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Many-to-Many Relationship
An instructor is associated with several (possibly 0) students via advisor A student is associated with several (possibly 0) instructors via advisor Database System Concepts
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Participation of an Entity Set in a Relationship Set
Total participation (indicated by double line): every entity in the entity set participates in at least one relationship in the relationship set E.g., participation of section in sec_course is total every section must have an associated course Partial participation: some entities may not participate in any relationship in the relationship set Example: participation of instructor in advisor is partial Database System Concepts
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Alternative Notation for Cardinality Limits
Cardinality limits can also express participation constraints Database System Concepts
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E-R Diagram with a Ternary Relationship
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Cardinality Constraints on Ternary Relationship
We allow at most one arrow out of a ternary (or greater degree) relationship to indicate a cardinality constraint E.g., an arrow from proj_guide to instructor indicates each student has at most one guide for a project If there is more than one arrow, there are two ways of defining the meaning. E.g., a ternary relationship R between A, B and C with arrows to B and C could mean Each A entity is associated with a unique entity from B and C or Each pair of entities from (A, B) is associated with a unique C entity, and each pair (A, C) is associated with a unique B Each alternative has been used in different formalisms To avoid confusion we outlaw more than one arrow Database System Concepts
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Weak Entity Sets An entity set that does not have a primary key is referred to as a weak entity set. The existence of a weak entity set depends on the existence of a identifying entity set It must relate to the identifying entity set via a total, one-to-many relationship set from the identifying to the weak entity set Identifying relationship depicted using a double diamond The discriminator (or partial key) of a weak entity set is the set of attributes that distinguishes among all the entities of a weak entity set. The primary key of a weak entity set is formed by the primary key of the strong entity set on which the weak entity set is existence dependent, plus the weak entity set’s discriminator. Database System Concepts
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Weak Entity Sets (Cont.)
We underline the discriminator of a weak entity set with a dashed line. We put the identifying relationship of a weak entity in a double diamond. Primary key for section – (course_id, sec_id, semester, year) Database System Concepts
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Weak Entity Sets (Cont.)
Note: the primary key of the strong entity set is not explicitly stored with the weak entity set, since it is implicit in the identifying relationship. If course_id were explicitly stored, section could be made a strong entity, but then the relationship between section and course would be duplicated by an implicit relationship defined by the attribute course_id common to course and section Database System Concepts
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E-R Diagram for a University Enterprise
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E-R Design Decisions The use of an attribute or entity set to represent an object. Whether a real-world concept is best expressed by an entity set or a relationship set. The use of a ternary relationship versus a pair of binary relationships. The use of a strong or weak entity set. Database System Concepts
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Symbols Used in E-R Notation
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Symbols Used in E-R Notation (Cont.)
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Exercises Design a database for a world-wide package delivery company (e.g., DHL or FedEX). The database must be able to keep track of customers (who ship items) and customers (who receive items); some customers may do both. Each package must be identifiable and trackable, so the database must be able to store the location of the package and its history of locations. Locations include trucks, planes, airports, and warehouses. Your design should include an E-R diagram, a set of relational schemas, and a list of constraints, including primary-key and foreign-key constraints. Database System Concepts
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Exercises - Solution Solution: Entities (Objects): Relationships:
Publisher Author Customer Book Warehouse Shopping_basket Relationships: Author – Book Book – Publsiher Book – Shopping_basket Book – Warehouse Customer - Shopping_basket Database System Concepts
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Exercises - Solution Database System Concepts
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Homework Construct an E-R diagram for a car insurance company whose customers own one or more cars each. Each car has associated with it zero to any number of recorded accidents. Each insurance policy covers one or more cars, and has one or more premium payments associated with it. Each payment is for a particular period of time, and has an associated due date, and the date when the payment was received. Design an E-R diagram for keeping track of the exploits of your favorite sports team. You should store the matches played, the scores in each match, the players in each match, and individual player statistics for each match. Summary statistics should be modeled as derived attributes. Database System Concepts
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Homework (Cont.) Consider a database used to record the marks that students get in different exams of different course offerings (sections). Construct an E-R diagram that models exams as entities, and uses a ternary relationship, for the database. Construct an alternative E-R diagram that uses only a binary relationship between student and section. Make sure that only one relationship exists between a particular student and section pair, yet you can represent the marks that a student gets in different exams. Database System Concepts
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